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Old 04-07-2007, 08:01 AM
E-Bone
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Default St. Pete/Tampa/Sarasota boat-based kiting

The good news is, even after we get kicked off all of the beaches because of kookz crashing kitez onto tourists, we will still be able to kite with a boat. Just find some flats, drop anchor, rig in three feet of water, and rip it up.

I spent yesterday riding in a local bay with several relatively new local kiters who are riding great for the amount of time they have been kiting because they are charging by boat most sessions. Each rider is independent and having a great time compared to other kiters with the same amount of time invested.

No crowded launch spots, no getting dragged into fixed objects, no getting pushed around by adverse currents, no bystanders, no driving 45+ minutes to the closest launch spot on land. Instead of dealing with all of those distractions, these new local riders are simply progressing their skillz every session. I saw Woody from Bradenton yesterday and he is kicking ass. He is riding 100 times better than when I last saw him at the Skyway. Dieter was there, as well, and he was charging all over the place, holding down a 15m Ion while I was cruising on my 12m Ion. Who cares if you are a little overpowered if you have miles of open water downwind of you?

Mad propz to my new friend Jim, who invited me to charge in his boat and check out their scene, and to Doug from Rhode Island, who hooked me up with Jim in the first place.

The funny thing is that where we were riding, 5 kites hardly even scratched the surface. It's strange how small a 14m kite lookz when someone is riding it in vast, open water. We could have had 35 kites up and it would not have been crowded. Also, there were numerous other spots nearby where we could have ridden. We just went to the shallows that were closest to the dock where Jim picked me up.

There is so much water around here, there is no reason not to explore it further, especially with the depower capabilities of the new kites. There is so much kiting potential in this area that we have not unlocked yet.

In 2003, when I first charged the flats off of Key West with Paul Menta, launching a kite was still a two person operation. Now, however, after rigging your kite with the assistance of a few buoys to which you attach your kite and your bar, you just launch a bow or SLE with the kite flying by the chicken loop off of the boat, just like a self-launch on land using a piece of PVC or a trailer hitch, etc. Once we got to the spot yesterday, Jim was already rigged and Doug, Dieter and Woody were already riding. I rigged and launched alone and it did not take much longer than doing so on land, if at all.

We were out of some nice boatz yesterday, but it seems that you could do this with a boat as small as a kayak, certainly with a jet ski, definitely with an inflatable with a 15hp. Besides getting you there, the boat's main function is holding extra gear (a second kite, a smaller board, food and water, whatever), so the bigger the boat, the more you will be able to bring along. Also, a bigger boat will allow you to get out of the wind and chill whenever you want a break.

We are probably going to try this soon in a sailboat with little draw. If that works, it will be a great solution, too, because you could take a break during a session, dry off, and take a nap below (or even make love to your woman) before arising to kick ass on the water again.

The main issue with boat selection is inflating the kite. You can not stand in the water and use a regular pump because the pump will be under water, so a stage (scuba) tank may be the solution to easy inflation for sailboats. Also, with a jetski, you can inflate a kite on any nearby land then ride holding the kite behind you to where you want to lauch. We had a skiff yesterday, so it was easy to stand in the boat and inflate a kite with a traditional pump.

The crowds this last year have been tough to handle for some of us who have been around for a while. Most of the new kiters strike me as being really cool people, but crowded launch and riding spots can make that harder to see. Yesterday, I was extremely stoked to be around each kiter at the session and it was easy to appreciate each of them as unique and worthwhile individuals. That is how this sport is supposed to be. I am looking forward to my next kite session that starts on a dock.
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